SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 5
‘Emperor’: How the Peace Was Won
Posted On March 24, 2013
By J.K. YAMAMOTO, Rafu Staff Writer
The producers of “Emperor,” a historical drama now playing in theaters nationwide, attended a
recent screening in Little Tokyo to talk about why they made the film.
Set during the U.S. occupation of Japan, the story begins with Gen. Douglas MacArthur (Tommy
Lee Jones) ordering Gen. Bonner Fellers (Matthew Fox) to launch an investigation to determine
whether Emperor Hirohito (Takataro Kataoka) should be tried as a war criminal or allowed to
remain as the country’s symbolic leader. Sparing the emperor would go against American public
opinion, but executing him would cause open revolt and make Japan impossible to govern.
Dr. Pedro Loureiro, historical consultant. (J.K. YAMAMOTO/Rafu Shimpo)
A free screening at the Aratani Theatre on March 3 was preceded by a statement from Deputy
Consul General Masahiro Suga, who said that the movie “doesn’t describe … war heroes. It
describes, based upon historical facts, the process and especially the first step of rebuilding
friendship again by former enemies.
“One my missions as deputy consul general of Japan in Los Angeles is to promote mutual
friendship of Japan and the United States of America. In those terms, I am pleased to know that
such movie is made. Now we enjoy a peaceful relationship again, but we always have to keep in
mind what happened in the past.”
Producers Yoko Narahashi, Eugene Nomura and Gary Foster took part in a Q&A session with
Dr. Pedro Loureiro, one of the film’s historical advisors, serving as moderator.
For Narahashi, whose credits include “The Last Samurai,” “Emperor” is a personal story because
her grandfather, Teizaburo Sekiya (played by Isao Natsuyagi), helped arrange the historic
meeting between MacArthur and Hirohito as a member of the emperor’s Ministry of the Interior.
“It was very meaningful story for me,” she said. “And it is a very strange world of the emperor
and there’s just so much that is closed and kept in secret … because very little is written in
history books.”
She added that the story is “very relevant to today because of the fact that this is one of the very
special cases where a surrender was a peaceful surrender, which affected us on to today.”
Although the movie’s love story between Fellers and Aya Shimada (Eriko Hatsune) is fictional,
Fellers had ties to Japan in real life, Loureiro said, noting that Feller’s cousin Gwen married
Japanese diplomat Hidenari Terasaki and lived with him in Japan during the war. Their story was
told in Gwen Terasaki’s memoir, “Bridge to the Sun.”
Foster recalled that his research for the film revealed “all the work that was done to make the
peace. There’s so many movies that are made about the prosecution of the war … and very few
have been made about how the peace was won. I was very intrigued because not only was the
peace won, but it was sustained to this day, and it’s a very rare occurrence in the history of the
world.
“At the end of World War I, the Allies did not show compassion toward the vanquished, and 30
years later World War II broke out … I thought that the movie would be a really strong story to
tell about how revenge is not always the answer.”
On the question of the emperor’s war responsibility, Foster commented, “It’s complicated
because there’s various books … different points of view, and nobody can really get to the exact
facts on what the emperor did or didn’t do in certain areas. As we say in the film, some things are
completely unknowable.”
Nomura, who was born in 1972, was raised in Japan but is bilingual and bicultural, having
attended The American School in Japan. Speaking from first-hand experience, he said, “A lot of
this information is unheard of even in the Japanese textbooks … I think it’s about time stories
like this come out into the open, even to the Japanese people, because not many people know
about it …
“When I looked in all the school textbooks in Japan, there’s the main photo of the emperor with
MacArthur and just a few lines … something you just skim through … If they’re doing a
documentary on a kamikaze pilot, it’ll be him sacrificing his life for the family or for the
country, but there’s not the other side … What we tried to accomplish with this film is (showing)
both sides … I think it’ll really open up a lot of discussions in Japan.”
Permission from Palace
Foster said one of the great accomplishments of the film was that it got “the first permit ever
issued to shoot on the grounds of the Imperial Palace … It took us eight months to get the permit.
It wasn’t easy. We were denied many times, but we were persistent …
“The day we shot, we had seven hours … There were at least 20 security people of different rank
surrounding our film crew, and if anything went wrong, we were told that we would be
immediately escorted off the grounds. So we could have no food, no drink, minimal equipment.
It was very stressful, but … I think the movie is better off for it.”
Narahashi said the emperor’s people also provided “this really thick, old book of pictures of
inside the palace,” allowing production designer Grant Major, who worked on the “Lord of the
Rings” trilogy, to duplicate the rooms as they looked in 1945.
Most of the movie was shot in New Zealand, Foster said. “There’s a very small but strong
Japanese community in New Zealand and they all supported the film. Most of them are in the
film as extras. We had people who were working with us on the props and the art and the cultural
aspect and helping our Kiwi and American actors understand the language and customs.”
To create a bombed-out Tokyo, the crew used an area where a series of warehouses had burned
down, Foster said. “We were able to clean it up and make it safe so we could shoot there … We
built in the foreground roads and encampments, then we took visual effects and extended past it.
So the big crane shots where MacArthur’s car is driving through that, the first third is the set; the
rest of it is all computer-generated.”
Nomura said the visual effects team studied the devastation in tsunami-ravaged Ishinomaki,
which was “very similar” to the aftermath of U.S. bombings of Japanese cities.
For the film’s ending, “we could not find in New Zealand a room that was worthy of
MacArthur’s study, which is in the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, the room where the final meeting
occurred,” Foster said. “We found our best choice wasn’t great … We had no more money, and
somehow we scraped and clawed and found a way to construct that room.”
Jones was the producers’ first choice to play MacArthur. “We wanted an iconic American actor
and our philosophy from the beginning was not to imitate MacArthur, but to create the spirit of
MacArthur,” Foster explained. “Tommy spends a lot of time in Japan, he does a series of coffee
commercials in Japan, he loves Japan, loves the theater, the kabuki, so he was very open to
taking on this role.”
The opposite strategy was used in casting Fox, best known for ABC’s “Lost.” “This is his first
leading role in a major film … We wanted Fellers to be Fellers. We didn’t want people to look at
the actor … We found a fine actor who also could just be the role and not bring distractions to
it,” Foster said.
Regarding the Japanese cast, Narahashi said, “I’ve been in this business for a long time in Japan,
so a lot of the actors have my trust, and when I approached some of the really good ones … they
were very happy to participate. Not a lot of Japanese actors speak English. Most of them could,
the ones that we asked, but some of them were not good enough, so we had to train them more.
The girl (Hatsune) originally couldn’t speak English, but we all liked her … and she really
worked hard to bring it up to par.”
MIS Missing
One issue of contention during the Q&A was the absence of any Nisei who served as translators
and interpreters with the Military Intelligence Service in occupied Japan. This was pointed out
by Darrell Kunitomi, whose father, Jack, is an MIS veteran who was recognized at
Congressional Gold Medal celebrations in Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles.
Foster responded, “GHQ stayed fairly insular in the early days. It did expand afterwards, but I
think in the early days MacArthur kept it very tight, very secure. At least that was our research.”
Actor/director Chris Tashima (“Visas and Virtue,” “Lil Tokyo Reporter”) argued, “It’s a glaring
omission … The MIS were heavily involved in everything the military was doing in the Pacific,
especially in Japan. MacArthur had them with him all the time. It seems absurd to me today a
film could be produced about U.S. military operations in Japan … and have no depiction, no
mention, no reference to the MIS. Even if they were not in the script you could have at least
included background extras.”
Foster emphasized, “This is not a documentary. We tried to get everything that we could right.
I’m sure there are more mistakes or more unauthentic things that people will find. But … we
tried to do the best we could to tell the spirit of the story … the decision-making process as it
related to the emperor. That was our goal.”
In the movie, Fellers’ interpreter is a Japanese national, Takahashi (Masayoshi Haneda).
Another audience member predicted “blowback” from Chinese and Korean audiences angry that
the emperor escaped punishment for Japanese atrocities in Asia.
Closing remarks were made by Loureiro, who has served as curator of Pomona College’s Pacific
Basin Institute. “It pleases me to see these kind of movies come out … At least it gets the general
audience … to watch and understand. They’re not about to sit down and read the books, but a
movie like this does the job.
“As a historian, as a consultant … I want the stuff even more accurate … but I realize this is a
commercial production. They will do what they have to do, but as long as they get this out,
people start watching it, maybe my daughter will grow up and do a sequel to this. Maybe
somebody out there will do the MIS … I think every little bit helps.
“We apologize for the omission … For my dissertation, my work was on the Navy’s equivalent
of the MIS. I interviewed all 24 senseis … I have a very close relationship with the MIS … (but)
I couldn’t include everything. Some of my teachers who were involved in the International
Military Tribunal, they weren’t shown, but I knew you can only do so much.
“If this movie makes it and people are interested in watching more movies like this, I think
we’ve done our job.”
Foster suggested that the DVD of “Emperor” could include a piece about the MIS.
On the Web: www.emperor-themovie.com

More Related Content

Similar to Rafu Shimpo Emperor

The grave of the fireflies 2.1
The grave of the fireflies 2.1The grave of the fireflies 2.1
The grave of the fireflies 2.1mitch9876
 
The grave of the fireflies 2.1
The grave of the fireflies 2.1The grave of the fireflies 2.1
The grave of the fireflies 2.1mitch9876
 
The grave of the fireflies 2.0
The grave of the fireflies 2.0The grave of the fireflies 2.0
The grave of the fireflies 2.0mitch9876
 
Got f(finaldraft mitch jodimatt) (2)
Got f(finaldraft   mitch jodimatt) (2)Got f(finaldraft   mitch jodimatt) (2)
Got f(finaldraft mitch jodimatt) (2)Jaime Fabey
 
The grave of the fireflies
The grave of the firefliesThe grave of the fireflies
The grave of the firefliesmitch9876
 
Presentation+script example
Presentation+script examplePresentation+script example
Presentation+script examplecarlpercival
 
Japanese Identity James Greer
Japanese Identity James GreerJapanese Identity James Greer
Japanese Identity James GreerJames Greer
 
Stray Dog, Akira Kurasawas Film Noir
Stray Dog, Akira Kurasawas Film NoirStray Dog, Akira Kurasawas Film Noir
Stray Dog, Akira Kurasawas Film NoirDaniel Potes
 
Japan project
Japan projectJapan project
Japan projectJohnkemo
 
CMNS 221: Japanese Anime Culture and Its Popularity
CMNS 221: Japanese Anime Culture and Its PopularityCMNS 221: Japanese Anime Culture and Its Popularity
CMNS 221: Japanese Anime Culture and Its PopularityNelson Hang
 
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character designCompare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character designguestcd8284
 
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character designCompare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character designguestcd8284
 
Final rough draft
Final rough draftFinal rough draft
Final rough drafthdn3
 
What The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Japan - Tekkoshocon 2011
What The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Japan - Tekkoshocon 2011What The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Japan - Tekkoshocon 2011
What The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Japan - Tekkoshocon 2011msprout
 

Similar to Rafu Shimpo Emperor (18)

The grave of the fireflies 2.1
The grave of the fireflies 2.1The grave of the fireflies 2.1
The grave of the fireflies 2.1
 
The grave of the fireflies 2.1
The grave of the fireflies 2.1The grave of the fireflies 2.1
The grave of the fireflies 2.1
 
The grave of the fireflies 2.0
The grave of the fireflies 2.0The grave of the fireflies 2.0
The grave of the fireflies 2.0
 
Japanese movies
Japanese moviesJapanese movies
Japanese movies
 
Got f(finaldraft mitch jodimatt) (2)
Got f(finaldraft   mitch jodimatt) (2)Got f(finaldraft   mitch jodimatt) (2)
Got f(finaldraft mitch jodimatt) (2)
 
The grave of the fireflies
The grave of the firefliesThe grave of the fireflies
The grave of the fireflies
 
Presentation+script example
Presentation+script examplePresentation+script example
Presentation+script example
 
Japanese Identity James Greer
Japanese Identity James GreerJapanese Identity James Greer
Japanese Identity James Greer
 
Stray Dog, Akira Kurasawas Film Noir
Stray Dog, Akira Kurasawas Film NoirStray Dog, Akira Kurasawas Film Noir
Stray Dog, Akira Kurasawas Film Noir
 
Japan project
Japan projectJapan project
Japan project
 
CMNS 221: Japanese Anime Culture and Its Popularity
CMNS 221: Japanese Anime Culture and Its PopularityCMNS 221: Japanese Anime Culture and Its Popularity
CMNS 221: Japanese Anime Culture and Its Popularity
 
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character designCompare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
 
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character designCompare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
Compare and contrast japanese and american animation character design
 
Final rough draft
Final rough draftFinal rough draft
Final rough draft
 
Media Dissertation
Media DissertationMedia Dissertation
Media Dissertation
 
What The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Japan - Tekkoshocon 2011
What The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Japan - Tekkoshocon 2011What The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Japan - Tekkoshocon 2011
What The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Japan - Tekkoshocon 2011
 
War
WarWar
War
 
War
WarWar
War
 

More from Pedro Loureiro

U.S. Navy Distinguished Public Service Award
U.S. Navy Distinguished Public Service AwardU.S. Navy Distinguished Public Service Award
U.S. Navy Distinguished Public Service AwardPedro Loureiro
 
New Interpretations Boulder Boys
New Interpretations Boulder BoysNew Interpretations Boulder Boys
New Interpretations Boulder BoysPedro Loureiro
 
USN Bouder Graduates 13
USN Bouder Graduates 13USN Bouder Graduates 13
USN Bouder Graduates 13Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Graduates 11
USN Boulder Graduates 11USN Boulder Graduates 11
USN Boulder Graduates 11Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Graduates 12
USN Boulder Graduates 12USN Boulder Graduates 12
USN Boulder Graduates 12Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Graduates 10
USN Boulder Graduates 10USN Boulder Graduates 10
USN Boulder Graduates 10Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Gradautes 9
USN Boulder Gradautes 9USN Boulder Gradautes 9
USN Boulder Gradautes 9Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Graduates 8
USN Boulder Graduates 8USN Boulder Graduates 8
USN Boulder Graduates 8Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Graduates 7
USN Boulder Graduates 7USN Boulder Graduates 7
USN Boulder Graduates 7Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Graduates 6
USN Boulder Graduates 6USN Boulder Graduates 6
USN Boulder Graduates 6Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Graduates 5
USN Boulder Graduates 5USN Boulder Graduates 5
USN Boulder Graduates 5Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Gradautes4
USN Boulder Gradautes4USN Boulder Gradautes4
USN Boulder Gradautes4Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Gradautes3
USN Boulder Gradautes3USN Boulder Gradautes3
USN Boulder Gradautes3Pedro Loureiro
 
USN Boulder Gradautes2
USN Boulder Gradautes2USN Boulder Gradautes2
USN Boulder Gradautes2Pedro Loureiro
 
Voice of America Navy Japanese Language School
Voice of America Navy Japanese Language SchoolVoice of America Navy Japanese Language School
Voice of America Navy Japanese Language SchoolPedro Loureiro
 
PreWarJapaneseEspionagePedroLoureiro
PreWarJapaneseEspionagePedroLoureiroPreWarJapaneseEspionagePedroLoureiro
PreWarJapaneseEspionagePedroLoureiroPedro Loureiro
 

More from Pedro Loureiro (20)

USC DIGITAL LIBRARY
USC DIGITAL LIBRARYUSC DIGITAL LIBRARY
USC DIGITAL LIBRARY
 
U.S. Navy Distinguished Public Service Award
U.S. Navy Distinguished Public Service AwardU.S. Navy Distinguished Public Service Award
U.S. Navy Distinguished Public Service Award
 
New Interpretations Boulder Boys
New Interpretations Boulder BoysNew Interpretations Boulder Boys
New Interpretations Boulder Boys
 
USN Bouder Graduates 13
USN Bouder Graduates 13USN Bouder Graduates 13
USN Bouder Graduates 13
 
USN Boulder Graduates 11
USN Boulder Graduates 11USN Boulder Graduates 11
USN Boulder Graduates 11
 
USN Boulder Graduates 12
USN Boulder Graduates 12USN Boulder Graduates 12
USN Boulder Graduates 12
 
USN Boulder Graduates 10
USN Boulder Graduates 10USN Boulder Graduates 10
USN Boulder Graduates 10
 
USN Boulder Gradautes 9
USN Boulder Gradautes 9USN Boulder Gradautes 9
USN Boulder Gradautes 9
 
USN Boulder Graduates 8
USN Boulder Graduates 8USN Boulder Graduates 8
USN Boulder Graduates 8
 
USN Boulder Graduates 7
USN Boulder Graduates 7USN Boulder Graduates 7
USN Boulder Graduates 7
 
USN Boulder Graduates 6
USN Boulder Graduates 6USN Boulder Graduates 6
USN Boulder Graduates 6
 
USN Boulder Graduates 5
USN Boulder Graduates 5USN Boulder Graduates 5
USN Boulder Graduates 5
 
USN Boulder Gradautes4
USN Boulder Gradautes4USN Boulder Gradautes4
USN Boulder Gradautes4
 
USN Boulder Gradautes3
USN Boulder Gradautes3USN Boulder Gradautes3
USN Boulder Gradautes3
 
USN Boulder Graduates
USN Boulder GraduatesUSN Boulder Graduates
USN Boulder Graduates
 
USN Boulder Gradautes2
USN Boulder Gradautes2USN Boulder Gradautes2
USN Boulder Gradautes2
 
Sensei Article Japan
Sensei Article JapanSensei Article Japan
Sensei Article Japan
 
NMIA
NMIANMIA
NMIA
 
Voice of America Navy Japanese Language School
Voice of America Navy Japanese Language SchoolVoice of America Navy Japanese Language School
Voice of America Navy Japanese Language School
 
PreWarJapaneseEspionagePedroLoureiro
PreWarJapaneseEspionagePedroLoureiroPreWarJapaneseEspionagePedroLoureiro
PreWarJapaneseEspionagePedroLoureiro
 

Rafu Shimpo Emperor

  • 1. ‘Emperor’: How the Peace Was Won Posted On March 24, 2013 By J.K. YAMAMOTO, Rafu Staff Writer The producers of “Emperor,” a historical drama now playing in theaters nationwide, attended a recent screening in Little Tokyo to talk about why they made the film. Set during the U.S. occupation of Japan, the story begins with Gen. Douglas MacArthur (Tommy Lee Jones) ordering Gen. Bonner Fellers (Matthew Fox) to launch an investigation to determine whether Emperor Hirohito (Takataro Kataoka) should be tried as a war criminal or allowed to remain as the country’s symbolic leader. Sparing the emperor would go against American public opinion, but executing him would cause open revolt and make Japan impossible to govern. Dr. Pedro Loureiro, historical consultant. (J.K. YAMAMOTO/Rafu Shimpo) A free screening at the Aratani Theatre on March 3 was preceded by a statement from Deputy Consul General Masahiro Suga, who said that the movie “doesn’t describe … war heroes. It describes, based upon historical facts, the process and especially the first step of rebuilding friendship again by former enemies.
  • 2. “One my missions as deputy consul general of Japan in Los Angeles is to promote mutual friendship of Japan and the United States of America. In those terms, I am pleased to know that such movie is made. Now we enjoy a peaceful relationship again, but we always have to keep in mind what happened in the past.” Producers Yoko Narahashi, Eugene Nomura and Gary Foster took part in a Q&A session with Dr. Pedro Loureiro, one of the film’s historical advisors, serving as moderator. For Narahashi, whose credits include “The Last Samurai,” “Emperor” is a personal story because her grandfather, Teizaburo Sekiya (played by Isao Natsuyagi), helped arrange the historic meeting between MacArthur and Hirohito as a member of the emperor’s Ministry of the Interior. “It was very meaningful story for me,” she said. “And it is a very strange world of the emperor and there’s just so much that is closed and kept in secret … because very little is written in history books.” She added that the story is “very relevant to today because of the fact that this is one of the very special cases where a surrender was a peaceful surrender, which affected us on to today.” Although the movie’s love story between Fellers and Aya Shimada (Eriko Hatsune) is fictional, Fellers had ties to Japan in real life, Loureiro said, noting that Feller’s cousin Gwen married Japanese diplomat Hidenari Terasaki and lived with him in Japan during the war. Their story was told in Gwen Terasaki’s memoir, “Bridge to the Sun.” Foster recalled that his research for the film revealed “all the work that was done to make the peace. There’s so many movies that are made about the prosecution of the war … and very few have been made about how the peace was won. I was very intrigued because not only was the peace won, but it was sustained to this day, and it’s a very rare occurrence in the history of the world. “At the end of World War I, the Allies did not show compassion toward the vanquished, and 30 years later World War II broke out … I thought that the movie would be a really strong story to tell about how revenge is not always the answer.” On the question of the emperor’s war responsibility, Foster commented, “It’s complicated because there’s various books … different points of view, and nobody can really get to the exact facts on what the emperor did or didn’t do in certain areas. As we say in the film, some things are completely unknowable.” Nomura, who was born in 1972, was raised in Japan but is bilingual and bicultural, having attended The American School in Japan. Speaking from first-hand experience, he said, “A lot of this information is unheard of even in the Japanese textbooks … I think it’s about time stories like this come out into the open, even to the Japanese people, because not many people know about it …
  • 3. “When I looked in all the school textbooks in Japan, there’s the main photo of the emperor with MacArthur and just a few lines … something you just skim through … If they’re doing a documentary on a kamikaze pilot, it’ll be him sacrificing his life for the family or for the country, but there’s not the other side … What we tried to accomplish with this film is (showing) both sides … I think it’ll really open up a lot of discussions in Japan.” Permission from Palace Foster said one of the great accomplishments of the film was that it got “the first permit ever issued to shoot on the grounds of the Imperial Palace … It took us eight months to get the permit. It wasn’t easy. We were denied many times, but we were persistent … “The day we shot, we had seven hours … There were at least 20 security people of different rank surrounding our film crew, and if anything went wrong, we were told that we would be immediately escorted off the grounds. So we could have no food, no drink, minimal equipment. It was very stressful, but … I think the movie is better off for it.” Narahashi said the emperor’s people also provided “this really thick, old book of pictures of inside the palace,” allowing production designer Grant Major, who worked on the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, to duplicate the rooms as they looked in 1945. Most of the movie was shot in New Zealand, Foster said. “There’s a very small but strong Japanese community in New Zealand and they all supported the film. Most of them are in the film as extras. We had people who were working with us on the props and the art and the cultural aspect and helping our Kiwi and American actors understand the language and customs.” To create a bombed-out Tokyo, the crew used an area where a series of warehouses had burned down, Foster said. “We were able to clean it up and make it safe so we could shoot there … We built in the foreground roads and encampments, then we took visual effects and extended past it. So the big crane shots where MacArthur’s car is driving through that, the first third is the set; the rest of it is all computer-generated.” Nomura said the visual effects team studied the devastation in tsunami-ravaged Ishinomaki, which was “very similar” to the aftermath of U.S. bombings of Japanese cities. For the film’s ending, “we could not find in New Zealand a room that was worthy of MacArthur’s study, which is in the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, the room where the final meeting occurred,” Foster said. “We found our best choice wasn’t great … We had no more money, and somehow we scraped and clawed and found a way to construct that room.” Jones was the producers’ first choice to play MacArthur. “We wanted an iconic American actor and our philosophy from the beginning was not to imitate MacArthur, but to create the spirit of MacArthur,” Foster explained. “Tommy spends a lot of time in Japan, he does a series of coffee commercials in Japan, he loves Japan, loves the theater, the kabuki, so he was very open to taking on this role.”
  • 4. The opposite strategy was used in casting Fox, best known for ABC’s “Lost.” “This is his first leading role in a major film … We wanted Fellers to be Fellers. We didn’t want people to look at the actor … We found a fine actor who also could just be the role and not bring distractions to it,” Foster said. Regarding the Japanese cast, Narahashi said, “I’ve been in this business for a long time in Japan, so a lot of the actors have my trust, and when I approached some of the really good ones … they were very happy to participate. Not a lot of Japanese actors speak English. Most of them could, the ones that we asked, but some of them were not good enough, so we had to train them more. The girl (Hatsune) originally couldn’t speak English, but we all liked her … and she really worked hard to bring it up to par.” MIS Missing One issue of contention during the Q&A was the absence of any Nisei who served as translators and interpreters with the Military Intelligence Service in occupied Japan. This was pointed out by Darrell Kunitomi, whose father, Jack, is an MIS veteran who was recognized at Congressional Gold Medal celebrations in Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles. Foster responded, “GHQ stayed fairly insular in the early days. It did expand afterwards, but I think in the early days MacArthur kept it very tight, very secure. At least that was our research.” Actor/director Chris Tashima (“Visas and Virtue,” “Lil Tokyo Reporter”) argued, “It’s a glaring omission … The MIS were heavily involved in everything the military was doing in the Pacific, especially in Japan. MacArthur had them with him all the time. It seems absurd to me today a film could be produced about U.S. military operations in Japan … and have no depiction, no mention, no reference to the MIS. Even if they were not in the script you could have at least included background extras.” Foster emphasized, “This is not a documentary. We tried to get everything that we could right. I’m sure there are more mistakes or more unauthentic things that people will find. But … we tried to do the best we could to tell the spirit of the story … the decision-making process as it related to the emperor. That was our goal.” In the movie, Fellers’ interpreter is a Japanese national, Takahashi (Masayoshi Haneda). Another audience member predicted “blowback” from Chinese and Korean audiences angry that the emperor escaped punishment for Japanese atrocities in Asia. Closing remarks were made by Loureiro, who has served as curator of Pomona College’s Pacific Basin Institute. “It pleases me to see these kind of movies come out … At least it gets the general audience … to watch and understand. They’re not about to sit down and read the books, but a movie like this does the job. “As a historian, as a consultant … I want the stuff even more accurate … but I realize this is a commercial production. They will do what they have to do, but as long as they get this out,
  • 5. people start watching it, maybe my daughter will grow up and do a sequel to this. Maybe somebody out there will do the MIS … I think every little bit helps. “We apologize for the omission … For my dissertation, my work was on the Navy’s equivalent of the MIS. I interviewed all 24 senseis … I have a very close relationship with the MIS … (but) I couldn’t include everything. Some of my teachers who were involved in the International Military Tribunal, they weren’t shown, but I knew you can only do so much. “If this movie makes it and people are interested in watching more movies like this, I think we’ve done our job.” Foster suggested that the DVD of “Emperor” could include a piece about the MIS. On the Web: www.emperor-themovie.com